Pubdate: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: John Ward Anderson and Molly Moore, Washington Post Foreign Service Page: A12 UNDER INVESTIGATION, MEXICAN DISAPPEARS Governor May Have Fled to Avoid Expected Arrest MEXICO CITY, March 31 - A state governor who is under investigation for alleged ties to Mexico's most powerful drug cartel has disappeared just days before police were expected to seek his arrest for drug trafficking and money laundering, according to law enforcement officials here. Gov. Mario Villanueva of the Yucatan Peninsula state of Quintana Roo had been under police surveillance but apparently eluded the agents who were tailing him, an official here said. Villanueva's six-year term, during which he has immunity from prosecution as a sitting governor, ends on Monday, and the Mexican media and law enforcement officials suggested today that he may have gone into hiding or fled the country to avoid arrest. If Villanueva -- who is a member of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) -- were to flee Mexico and evade charges, it would be a stunning blow to the country's justice system. For decades, corruption at the highest levels of Mexico's federal and state governments has been well documented, but few have ever been held accountable. Mexican officials have cited the year-long investigation of the governor as a symbol of the democratic change shaking Mexico and a signal that corruption is no longer being ignored within the PRI, which has run the country for the past 70 years. Officials in the governor's press office, noting they were besieged by media inquiries, said they could not provide any information about Villanueva's whereabouts, fueling speculation in the Mexican news media that he was dodging investigators. "If anybody knows where the governor is, please tell me," the state's second-ranking official told the daily newspaper El Universal. Villanueva has denied allegations of wrongdoing, most recently in a press conference last week. Villanueva has been the subject of an intense and unusually public investigation by U.S. and Mexican law enforcement agencies into allegations that he received millions of dollars in payoffs for protecting drug cartel kingpins and their shipments during his administration. In recent years, the Yucatan Peninsula -- and more specifically Villanueva's state, where the internationally famous beach resort of Cancun is located -- has grown into one of the main transit points for Colombian cocaine being shipped to the United States. The governor's apparent disappearance after failing to show up for a scheduled round of questioning by federal law enforcement officials on Tuesday capped weeks of jousting between Villanueva and his government accusers. Two weeks ago, in an hour-long speech to judges and lawyers in his home state in which he criticized the government's investigation, Villanueva provided some of the most detailed information yet of the attorney general's case against him. Villanueva said investigators allege that he permitted drug traffickers to use state-owned airport hangars for loading and unloading shipments of drugs, maintained close ties with the leaders of the country's most powerful drug mafia and is a cocaine user himself. Law enforcement officials from the United States, Mexico and other countries also are investigating bank accounts in the names of Villanueva, family members and friends that allegedly contain millions of dollars, including one Swiss account with $73 million in Villanueva's name, according to officials familiar with the investigations. Other bank accounts in the United States, Mexico, the Cayman Islands and the Bahamas also have been scrutinized. Mexican authorities also are considering charging Villanueva with drug trafficking, alleging that during his term as governor he was a chief protector for the Juarez cartel, Mexico's most powerful drug mafia. In recent years, the cartel has moved much of its operation to Quintana Roo where alleged kingpin Ramon Alcides Magana runs the cartel's activities, with help from Villanueva, U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials allege. Under a law intended to protect elected officials from malicious vendettas by political opponents, sitting governors have immunity from arrest and prosecution unless they are first impeached by the lower house of Congress. But rather than launch a politically charged impeachment procedure, Mexican officials decided to wait until Villanueva's term expired to attempt to prosecute him. Law enforcement officials said they always were concerned about the risk that he could flee before his tenure ends this Monday. Last week, after a daylong interrogation by senior officials of Mexico's federal anti-drug agency, Villanueva called a news conference and told reporters, "I'll come away clear from this affair and all its insinuations and accusations because they are baseless." But Villanueva failed to appear Tuesday in Mexico City for a second meeting with federal anti-drug investigators, instead sending a letter reiterating his denials of wrongdoing. "He did not show up, even though he signaled to us he would do so," Mariano Herran Salvatti, chief of the federal anti-drug agency told reporters. "He himself is rendering hollow his announcement that he would offer proof in his defense." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake